Boone Pickens on Gas Exports: 'Move It Out and Sell It'

T. Boone Pickens of BP Capital explains why he believes the government should green-light overseas sales of the nation's natural energy resource instead of keeping it here to drive down costs.

The Obama administration's plan to expand exports of natural gas makes sense, and the price for the commodity shouldn't be kept artificially low, T. Boone Pickens said Wednesday on CNBC.

"The producers have gone out and drilled for the natural gas. They should be entitled to get the best markets in the world, so let them have it," the chairman of BP Capital Management and proponent of natural gas told "Squawk on the Street."

"Why would you try to keep natural gas prices down to favor other industries?" Pickens asked. "It doesn't make sense. When you export that natural gas, you're going to create a lot of jobs.

"Go ahead and move it out and sell it," he said. "I'd go ahead and let the gas go into the global market."

When asked about the response of U.S. companies, such as the private firm Koch Industries, to the prospect of rising natural gas prices, Pickens said they had already benefited from cheap natural gas.

"That's fine—that's America, and that's the way it should be," he said. "But they should allow the producers to export if they want to export."

Pickens pointed out that the U.S. enjoys the lowest energy prices in the world, with oil, gasoline and natural gas selling at steep discounts compared with global prices. "Take advantage of it, use it, rebuild the economy on it and go forward."

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He dismissed environmental concerns over hydraulic fracking, adding that they are a recent phenomenon.

"Nobody ever said anything until recently," Pickens said. "We have fracked over 800,000 wells in Oklahoma and Texas, and nobody has ever complained about it. This is something that has been proven over and over again that this is safe. So proceed and get the natural gas out of the ground and use it."

Pickens said that approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline project "should be an easy one" with potentially 250 billion barrels of oil in northern Alberta—an amount comparable to Saudi Arabia's reserves. The U.S. would be "absolute fools" not to exploit the opportunity, he added.

"It's unbelievable," Pickens said. "We have been on the back of cheap energy in the United States. Any country in the world that is using its own resources is doing well. And that's exactly what can happen to the United States if we had a little leadership in Washington to take us down that path."

Pickens estimates that the U.S. has 125 to 130 years of recoverable natural gas reserves.

After the interview, Koch Industries submitted a statement to CNBC.com clarifying the company's stance on natural gas. Philip Ellender, president and chief operating office of Koch Companies Public Sector, said:

"We agree with Mr. Pickens' position on exports—to be clear, we are fully in favor of the freedom to export LNG.

Koch Industries believes free markets are the best means to allocate resources to the most number of people at the lowest cost. We believe that the free market, not government, should dictate how products like LNG are bought and sold.

We differ with Mr. Pickens on proposals that would artificially drive up demand through market-distorting subsidies and mandates."